The presence of your company is requested at the 5th annual Northeast & Atlantic Canada Environmental History Forum, to be held August 12-13, 2016 in Halifax.
Graciously hosted by the Gorsebrook Institute for Atlantic Canada Studies, Saint Mary’s University, it will include scintillating discussion, a trip to UNESCO World Heritage Site Grand Pré, and ice cream.
Papers are available at the NACEHF website for us to read before the meeting. (Password is “walden.”) Each presenter will have 10-15 minutes to introduce and contextualize their work, and then the floor is opened to group discussion for about 30 minutes. This year’s meeting is particularly focused on the Gulf of the St. Lawrence, as we hope to publish a collection of essays on the environmental history of the Gulf.
Tentative Schedule
Location: Sobey Building, 415, Saint Mary’s University
Friday, 12 August
8:45-9:00 am Introductions
9:00 am Jack Bouchard, University of Pittsburgh
The Problem of Scurvy in the 16th Century Newfoundland Fishery
9:45 am Daniel Soucier, University of Maine
War upon the French, the Fishermen, and the Fishery: Razing Crops, Cattle, and Built Environment during the Gulf of St. Lawrence Campaign, 1758
10:30 Break
10:45 Brian Payne, Bridgewater State University
The Fish Trade of Prince Edward Island and Resource Diplomacy in the Gulf of St. Lawrence
11:30 Matt McKenzie, University of Connecticut
Outsourcing Resource Exploitation: The Triumph of Atlantic Canada’s Nineteenth Century Fisheries, 1866-1916
12:15-2:15 Lunch
2:15 Claire Campbell, Bucknell University
“A window looking seaward”: Finding environmental history in the writing of L.M. Montgomery
3:00 Jeffrey Egan, University of Connecticut
“The Great Reservoir”: Frederick P. Stearns and the Boston Metropolitan Water Supply, 1885-1905
3:45 Will Knight, Canadian Science & Technology Museum
Exploring northeastern fish introductions using GIS
4:00 Margot Maddison-MacFadyen, Nippising University
The Empire, Trees, Climate Project
Saturday, 13 August
8:45 Michael Stamm, Michigan State University
The Statue and the Dam: The Chicago Tribune and the Corporate Transformation of the North Shore Landscape
9:30 Kris Archibald, Concordia University
Health and the Workplace Environment: New Attitudes Towards Pollution Within Sydney’s Steelworker Community, 1967-1990
10:15 Discussion of Gulf of the St. Lawrence edited collection
Edward MacDonald, UPEI & Brian Payne, BSU
11:00 Depart for Grand Pré (tentative schedule):
arrive Wolfville 12:00 pm
Grand Pré National Historic Site 2:00-4:00 pm
Lookoff, etc. 4:00-4:30 pm
Return to Halifax 5:30 pm
Updated: Here is a revised possible program in case of rain.
Friday, 12 August
8:45-9:00 am Introductions
9:00 am Jack Bouchard, University of Pittsburgh
The Problem of Scurvy in the 16th Century Newfoundland Fishery
9:45 am Daniel Soucier, University of Maine
War upon the French, the Fishermen, and the Fishery: Razing Crops, Cattle, and Built Environment during the Gulf of St. Lawrence Campaign, 1758
10:30 Break
10:45 Brian Payne, Bridgewater State University
The Fish Trade of Prince Edward Island and Resource Diplomacy in
the Gulf of St. Lawrence
11:30 Matt McKenzie, University of Connecticut
Outsourcing Resource Exploitation: The Triumph of Atlantic Canada’s Nineteenth Century Fisheries, 1866-1916
12:15 Margot Maddison-MacFadyen
Province House and the Empire, Trees, Climate Project
12:30-1:15 Lunch at SMU and depart for Grand Pré
2:15 Arrive at Grand Pré
2:30-4:30 Grand Pré NHS
4:30-5 Blomidon
6 pm Return to Halifax
Saturday, 13 August
8:45 Reconvene
9:00 Jeffrey Egan, University of Connecticut
“The Great Reservoir”: Frederick P. Stearns and the Boston Metropolitan Water Supply, 1885-1905
9:45 Kris Archibald, Concordia University
Health and the Workplace Environment: New Attitudes Towards Pollution Within Sydney’s Steelworker Community, 1967-1990
10:30 Break
10:45 Michael Stamm, Michigan State University
The Statue and the Dam: The Chicago Tribune and the Corporate Transformation of the North Shore Landscape
11:30 Claire Campbell, Bucknell University
“A window looking seaward”: Finding environmental history in the writing of L.M. Montgomery
12:15 Discussion of Gulf of the St. Lawrence edited collection
Edward MacDonald, UPEI & Brian Payne, BSU
Travel Information
Halifax International Airport (http://hiaa.ca) has flights to most major Canadian cities as well as New York/Newark, Philadelphia, and Boston. It is also accessible by train (http://www.viarail.ca/), and if you drive, you are greeted by a lighthouse situated rather incongruously on the Tantramar marshland.
August should be lovely, with plenty of sunshine and temperatures in the low 20s (but then again, they’re referring to “Junuary” this year, so please bring a warm sweater & umbrella).
You can learn more about accommodation and the city – which is a wonderful combination of historic, beautiful, green, and walkable – through http://www.destinationhalifax.com and http://www.novascotia.com . Most of the hotels will be about a 15-20 minute walk away. You may also want to consider accommodation at one of the universities, all of which are about a 15 minute walk from downtown:
http://www.smu.ca/about/conference-services-Summer-Accommodations.html
http://www.dal.ca/dept/summer-accommodations.html
http://www.ukings.ca/accommodations
Most importantly, please feel free to contact me with any questions: claire.campbell@bucknell.edu or 570-577-1364.
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